Current Research

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Philippine tarsiers: Not world's smallest primates, not marsupials

BBC's Meeting the world's smallest primate(click link for the site and video),is being criticized for its inaccurate information. Made as an educational piece to show that the animal's popularity with tourists is affecting the animals' welfare, poor research and possibly bad editing culminated in some errors. While these errors are minute, they affect the overall educational purpose of this video.

A Philippine tarsier (T. syrichta)

The show's host referred to Philippines tarsiers (Tarsius syrichta) as marsupials. T. syrichta (and all tarsiers for that matter) do not have marsupium, the hallmark of marsupials. Tarsiers are primates, grouped in the suborder of Haplorrhini. Tarsier offspring are born precocial, while marsupial offspring (joey) are born altricial.

A baby tarsier with its mother. Tarsier offspring are born precocial.

Precocial offspring are relatively mature and mobile after birth. There is a distinct slowing down in brain growth relative to body growth at around time of birth. Altricial offspring on the other hand are born helpless. Their brain growth declines during the developmental stage instead of around the time of birth. Human babies are unique within primates because they are born "secondarily altricial" (Martin, 2007). While human offspring are born helpless, their brain growth relative to body growth continues for about a year before slowing down. Calling tarsiers marsupials is just rude (don't we all want to be primates?).The claim that Philippines tarsiers isthe smallest primate is also false. The title for the smallest primate actually goes to Berthe's mouse lemur (Microcebus berthae) (Dammhahn & Kappeler, 2005).

Philippines tarsiers have a head and body length of 11.7-12.7 cm (4.6-5.0 in) for both males and females (Gron, 2008). Berthe's mouse lemur have a head and body length of 9.2 cm (3.6 in) for both males and females (Gron, 2009). Clearly, Philippines tarsiers is longer in size than Berthe's mouse lemur.